EU-US trade talks seen dragging on until mid-2016

As the European Union and the United States wrap up a week of talks on the transatlantic trade and investment partnership (TTIP) in Washington, the EU still says it hopes to have something to show before the European elections in May. But observers say the real, final deadline is mid 2016, just before the US elections.

Partners on both sides of the Atlantic have expressed hope to finish negotiations on the trade deal swiftly, perhaps even before the end of this year.

But experts argue this target is over-optimistic. “There is no evidence that they can get this done before [that date],” Bruce Stokes, director of the global economic program at the Washington-based Pew Research Center, told EURACTIV.

The real deadline negotiators should focus on, Stokes said, “is whether they can get it done before the presidential elections in the US, in 2016.”

European and American representatives engaged in a stocktaking exercise in Washington this week on the negotiation process. A fourth round of talks in due in March, at an EU-US summit in Brussels.

But negotiations are likely to be suspended between April and the autumn due to the European Parliament elections.

Christian Leffler, managing director for the Americas at the EU’s external action service, said there was an urge to come with early "easy deliverables", but that there was none. So we'll slide into the usual tit for tat negotiation and the prospects for making any real progress, are bleak. We should keep cool but continue the real work.”

Stokes and Leffler spoke at a conference of the European Strategic and Policy Analysis System (ESPAS), in Brussels on Monday and Tuesday (17-18 February).

Legacy of Obama administration

A transatlantic FTA would make part of the Obama administration’s legacy, but “he won’t get credit in the history books for having started this,” Stokes argued. The interest of the American president and his trade negotiators would drop considerably if the target date is pushed beyond early 2016.

The US congress has final approval over the trade agreement, putting pressure on the American administration to come up with significant results if it wants TTIP to pass. “There has to be significant value to make it politically sailable,” Stokes said.

Peter van Ham, senior research fellow at the Clingendael institute of international relations concurred, in an earlier interview with euractiv.de, saying “the whole thing lasting 18 months or so is without precedent and technically almost impossible to negotiate. I never really believed the optimism about the time frame envisioned.”

The public debate on TTIP in Europe has turned sour over the past months. Civil society organisations have criticised the negotiations for lacking transparency and MEPs fear the agreement endangers environmental standards and consumer protection.

Last month, the EU Commission launched a TTIP advisory group to ease such criticism. As Europe struggles with a consensus, Stokes argues the same is happening in the US.

“One of the conundrums in an era of globalisation, is that such issues touch more and more on citizens’ lives, so people are more worried,” according to Stokes. “The public wants to know what goes on behind closed doors, but you cannot conduct a negotiation like that. The public’s need for transparency flies in the face of the art of negotiation.”

According to Leffler, there is no turning back for negotiators: the talks are “doomed to succeed” as “a number of senior political negotiators, including the US president, have vouched [for a successful TTIP].”

TTIP talks started in July 2013. A second round of negotiations was held in November and a third round in December 2013. The stakes are huge for both partners, as EU-US trade accounts for up to €2 billion euro a day – the biggest trade relationship in the world.

Background

Negotiations between the US and the EU on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) started in July.

If successful, the deal would cover more than 40% of global GDP and account for large shares of world trade and foreign direct investment. The EU-US trade relationship is already the biggest in the world. Traded goods and services are worth €2 billion.

TTIP would be the biggest bilateral trade deal ever negotiated, resulting in millions of euros of savings for companies and creating hundreds of thousands of jobs. It is claimed that average European households would gain an extra €545 annually, and that Europe's economy would be boosted by around 0.5% of GDP, if such a deal was fully implemented.

Brussels and Washington have set the ambitious goal of completing negotiations by the end of 2014.

Advertisement

Comments

0 responses to “EU-US trade talks seen dragging on until mid-2016”

“According to Leffler, there is no turning back for negotiators: the talks are “doomed to succeed”

If my MEP wants my vote (likewise for many others I know) they and their party need to sign (in blood) that TTIP regardless of what it says, will be rejected but their party come a vote on it. If many/most MEPs were obliged to make this commitment at the elections then Leffler et al could find something more useful to do with their time. Free trade exists now between the USA and the EU – we do not need a TTIP – although it would be nice if US companies such as Google etc paid Euro taxes (which for the most part – they don’t – maybe that would be something (useful) for Leffler and his mates to do

Meanwhile the European Commission is in denial but the problem is that the criticism is spot on. Of course gene corn, pharma meat and chlorinated chicken was high on the US trade agenda, and the problem of regulatory invasion in trade policy is that it is a way of no return for the legislator, where leaving the agreement would amount to economic suicide. Think of the flexibility loss through TRIPs. If TRIPs was an international agreement, not traded for something as large as GATT, we could suspend it. Instead our legislators are stuck with the liquid concrete of rules that were agreed upon before the internet revolution. TRIPS still had the fiction that it was trade related barriers. TTIP is the trade takeover of regulatory issues and investor protection amounts to a corporate takeover of legislation. I am not a leftist critic of trade policy but I don’t understand how one could dare to negotiate with the US before Buy America gets revoked and geografical indications fully accepted. I also don’t get what the EU wants to achieve with the deal… what are the European demands? All I see are US-run EU lobby umbrella groups that say it was a good idea and the German car industry. The EU makes rules for 27 member states, can’t be too difficult for the US to unilaterally harmonise with what works for 27 and get their own regulatory garden in order. Europe was the bad bank of the US housing crisis, Europe is spied by her allies and our EU-Commission conspires with the US to take over regulatory powers of the democratic legislators, what Cathy Ashton called the “transatlantic market for regulation”, in other words, a race to the bottom where our state becomes captured by multinational US corporations.

The European Commission denial of facts comes at a high price and put the whole deal in jeopardy.